On 04/01/16 18:12, Andres Freund wrote:
Pages containing data of unlogged tables aren't ever flushed to disk unless a) a shutdown checkpoint is performed b) a buffer containing data from an unlogged table is used for something else c) the database being copied is the the source of a CREATE DATABASE .. TEMPLATE Hence, if there's an unclean shutdown, there's absolutely no guarantee about the on-disk state of unlogged tables. Even if they haven't been modified in ages - there could have been many many dirty pages in shared buffers when crashing. Always flushing dirty pages of unlogged tables at checkpoint would greatly increase the overhead for memory resident, write heavy workloads that use unlogged tables.
If there was a command to flush a specific unlogged table to disk it would work around all these issues no? Perhaps if you marked the table as read only at the same time it would flush it to disk and ensure no more data could be written to it eg (ALTER TABLE ... SET READ ONLY on an unlogged table would flush + not truncate after crash). In our case this would be great as we want to use these as permanent tables for speed; but after an initial data dump we don't change the data again so we could just do this at the end of the import process.
Mark -- Sent via pgsql-performance mailing list (pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-performance